Advertising & Brochures Research Archives

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1951 “4-Wheel Drive Takes You There” Brochures

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

In 1951 Willys-Overland launched a “4-Wheel Drive Takes You There brochure” for the Willys Wagon. Subsequently, there appear to have been two additional versions of the brochure, numbered differently, but with seemingly no additional substantive text changes. Each form folds out to a 17″x11″ large format brochure.

The first example of this brochure is burdened with an unusually long form identifier: Form 4X4735W-M1-100M, a number which leverages the wagon-model-type (4x473SW) as part of the numbering system.

1951-4X4735W-M1-100M-wagon-4-wheel-drive-takes-you-there-brochure1-lores

1951-4X4735W-M1-100M-wagon-4-wheel-drive-takes-you-there-brochure2-lores

1951-4X4735W-M1-100M-wagon-4-wheel-drive-takes-you-there-brochure3-lores

1951-4X4735W-M1-100M-wagon-4-wheel-drive-takes-you-there-brochure4-lores

This second version of the brochure is available on eBay. Given the grille style doesn’t change for this iteration, I can only assume that this version of the brochure was also printed in 1951. It has the updated form name of 4X4735W-M2-100M-251. It is possible the “251” at the end of the form number means it was printed in February of 1951.

1951-4X473SW-M2-100M-251-4-wheel-drive-takes-you-there-wagon-brochure1

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1956 Forms W-25X-XX Brochures

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE II: This poster was based on the 1956 W-25X-6 brochures. This also seems to confirm that there was never any Form W-251-6 brochure (which had been a lingering question of mine).

1956-form-w-250-6-brochure-jeep-poster

Original Post From Feb 17, 2020 (but with all new text): Below are the front pages from a series of 1956 brochures. I think I’ve got everything sorted out … 

  1. Form W-250-6 V1 (CJ-5/CJ-6/CJ-3B):
    1956-form-w-250-6-v1-brochure-2nd-3-lores
  2. Form W-250-6 V2 (CJ-5/CJ-6/CJ-3B) … this form replaced the one above:
    1957-truck-form-W-250
  3. Form W-250-6X (CJ-5/CJ-6/CJ-3B) Export:
    1956-form-w-230-6x-export-cj5-1-lores
  4. Form W-252-6 V1 (Trucks):
    1956-form-w-252-6-green-truck-brochure1-lores
  5. Form W-252-6 V2 (Trucks) This form replacement the green truck form above:
    1957-truck-form-W-252
  6. Form W-252-6X (Trucks) Export:
    Photos
  7. Form W-253-6 (Wagons) (was there an earlier version of this form?):
    1957-truck-form-W-253
  8. Form W-253-6X (Wagons) Export: Anyone have this form?
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1956 CJ-5/CJ-6/CJ-3B Domestic Brochure Forms W-250-6

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: There were two different Form W-250-6’s produced during 1956. The first one shown below is version one I believe. Making the one at the bottom version two. Both differ significantly from the export version of the form, which is Form W-250-6X

What’s the difference between them? Both forms open up to 11″x17″, so the sizes are the same. However, the front page is completely different. In version #2 of the brochure (at the bottom) you can see that the front page is more harmonious with the Wagon (Form W-253-6) and the Truck (Form W-252-6) brochures. The second page, reached by opening the brochure horizontally, shows part of the vehicle line in version #1, while the vehicle line is absent from version #2 at bottom. Maybe version #1 of this brochure was pulled because Willys Motors’ management wasn’t ready to introduce the FC-170? I can’t say for sure.  Finally, you’ll also notice that “WILLYS” is absent from the front of version #1, while “BY WILLYS” is prominent on the front of the bottom brochure.

Because that reasoning, I believe this is Version #1 of Form W-250-6 …

1956-form-w-250-6-v1-brochure-2nd-3-lores 1956-form-w-250-6-v1-brochure-2nd-5-lores 1956-form-w-250-6-v1-brochure-2nd-6-lores

1956-form-w-250-6-v1-brochure-2nd-4-lores

This shows the back of the brochure when opened fully:

1956-form-w-250-6-v1-brochure-2nd-7-lores

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This 1956 CJ-5/CJ-6 brochure Form W-250-6 is the domestic version of Form W-250-6X.

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1956 Domestic Truck Brochure Forms W-252-6

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

xUPDATE: There were actually two different Form W-252-6’s produced during 1956. This green one shown below and the one at the bottom. Both differ significantly from the export version of the form, which is Form W-252-6X

What’s the difference between them? Well, the text, the fonts, and the font sizes are nearly identical. Both forms open up to 11″x17″. Obviously the front of the bottom version is more colorful and the front color image is certainly different. But, what might be the biggest change and the reason for the alternative version is that the green-themed brochure is printed with the word ‘Jeep’ in a san-serif font in numerous places, while the brochure at the bottom uses the much more standard jeep font. Finally, you’ll also notice that “WILLYS” is absent from the front of the green brochure, while “BY WILLYS” is prominent on the front of the colorful brochure.

Because that reasoning, I believe this is Version #1 of Form W-252-6 …

1956-form-w-252-6-green-truck-brochure1-lores

1956-form-w-252-6-green-truck-brochure2-lores

1956-form-w-252-6-green-truck-brochure4-lores 1956-form-w-252-6-green-truck-brochure3-lores

This is how the back of the brochure looks fully opened…

Photos

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Wausau Iron Works Brochure

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

UPDATE: This post now includes the full brochure, along with updated information about the company.

Wausau Iron Works, unsurprisingly, incorporated in Wausau, Wisconsin, as an offshoot of the Northern Boiler & Structural Iron Works out of Appleton. The founders launched Wausau in 1908 to build bridges (some of them here), but expanded into snow plows in 1923. During WWII, some of the company’s plows were turning to the military.

Oddly enough, there was an earlier “Wausau Iron Works” was founded by Ely Wright in 1874. It was the oldest industrial establishment in the city and supplied machinery for the early railroads and for sawmills in north and central Wisconsin. However, I could find no evidence it made snow plows.

wausau-iron-works-plows-form-36TJ-2-lores wausau-iron-works-plows-form-36TJ-3-lores wausau-iron-works-plows-form-36TJ-4-lores

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1950 Truck w/ New Hurricane Engine Brochure

• CATEGORIES: Advertising & Brochures, Features This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

This is one of the introductory brochures for the new 1/2 ton truck powered by the new Hurricane engine. It’s Form HTTMI-3CM-350, a form number I’ve yet to decode for any meaning. This folds out to roughly 11″x17″. Here’s another one of these on eBay at a good starting price.

Scannable Document Scannable Document Scannable Document

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